Hi Tom,
Yes the ventilator fan from the cabin still works.. although about 15% of the fan is covered about the top shelf.. a slight oversight.
Condensation issues? Maybe on real cold nights you might find some on the sides mainly, but its a simple wipe in the morning to correct that. This has only been an issue for mid Sept plus camping here up north in Ontario. I wouldn't worry about it, or even be concerned about adjusting your design unless your planning to use yours for winter camping.
Yes the grill stove is great! Works well, adapts to your cooking and requires less pots, pans, fry pans and such. Its an easy mod to the Hunter slide out drawer to adapt. This mod was mainly required so the galley door doesn't rest against the front of the stove.
If you REALLY must have that Camp Chef, you could tear out the back dividers and redo it to suit. I'm not a wordworking type myself, instead we just did our homework and provided the design we wanted, and had a local cabinettemaker do his magic. The existing lower layout worked well for us however. Battery lower left, remove the middle door for the 5Gal water jug that fits perfectly! (Hunter had not designed it for the jug... it just happened to fit!). Any novice woodworker should be able to revamp the back end in my opinion.
Yes Hunter has kept things simple and priced well. They have not skimped on quality though, and it has some features the Camp-Inn does not have such as a large underbunk storage area and large slider area in the front. If you purchase the Hunter with the fiberglass fenders you can also have a more retro/traditional look vs the more modern look of the Camp-Inn. The main difference I consider is the galley setup. Hunters is a bit on the basic side, but with the mods we made I feel it provides the most advantages for campside cooking. Still love the look of the Camp-Inn though. Overall it is probably the top teardrop with Hunter a close 2nd. Mind you the Cozy Cruiser looks pretty nice too, but we don't seem to have anyone on here that owns one.
I know what you mean by over analyzing. I do that A LOT, and get a bit anal about things when we are planning/purchasing, but it usually means we are very happy with our decisions.
Here is a shot of our first year with the 'stock' galley (slightly messy, useless Koolatron, propane bottles)...
Here is last years setup with the new galley (less mess, more organization, everything handy, 5lber propane tank)...
